Oculus Rift Gets Hulu App

hulu-vr-rift

Do you want to watch Hulu in virtual reality? You’re no longer limited to the Gear VR. The Hulu VR app has been available for Samsung’s VR headset for some time now but that changes now. The app is now available for the Oculus Rift VR headset and Hulu promises that given its strict hardware performance requirements for PCs that power the Rift, Hulu’s app provides a sharper and highly responsive viewing experience on this headset.

Hulu has also introduced a new and immersive virtual environment for fans of Syfy’s 12 Monkeys to watch the entire first season. Simply navigate to the 12 Monkey show page and it will automatically transport the viewer to the iconic Temporal Facility where the time machine is placed in this time travel thriller.

To create this space, Hulu teamed up with the show’s executive producer Terry Matalas and production designer John Mott. The space includes real-time rendered environments and animations which give viewers the feeling of being in the show itself. Hulu is going to create more spaces like for viewers to immerse themselves in the shows they love.

Users can access more than 30 pieces of original virtual reality content via the Oculus Rift app for free even if they don’t have a Hulu subscription. Hulu’s entire library of 2D content can also be streamed in immersive 3D settings via the app.

Oculus Rift Gets Hulu App , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

SpaceX Streak Of Successful Landings Ends

spacex-barge

SpaceX conducted a mission earlier today to launch two communications satellites into orbit. It was going to land the rocket on a drone ship in the sea but things didn’t go according to plan. SpaceX’s latest rocket booster landing has failed and the Falcon 9 rocket had a crash landing on the barge, ending the company’s streak of successful landings of its reusable Falcon 9 rocket.

After multiple failures, SpaceX finally nailed the drone ship landing earlier this year in April. The company then went on to successfully land the rocket on the floating drone barge multiple times after that. It recently announced plans to relaunch one of those reusable rockets later this year.

SpaceX wasn’t lucky this time around. Founder Elon Musk confirmed the failed landing on Twitter, indicating that perhaps the thrust on one of the rocket’s three landing engines might have been too low. He also said that the company is working on upgrades to enable the rocket to make up for a thrust shortfall and expects the fix to be implemented a few months down the road.

There were no problems with the mission itself. The rocket was launched perfectly to deliver two Boeing Ku-band satellites. The booster entered the Earth’s atmosphere after delivering the payload and then attempted the landing on the floating drone ship. It was only the drone ship landing that was botched, and it goes without saying that SpaceX is going to fix this and attempt another one with its next landing.

SpaceX Streak Of Successful Landings Ends , original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.

When drones go pro

Drones Edits High Res (16 of 18) As drone pilots step out of isolated hobbyist groups and into the spotlight, many are asking themselves the same question: What will it take to make drone racing a sport acknowledged and embraced the world over? Read More

Merrick Garland Tears Up During Fifth Grade Commencement Address

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Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland couldn’t help but tear up while giving a commencement address to the fifth grade class at J.O. Wilson Elementary School in Washington, D.C.

Garland has tutored and mentored students at the school for 18 years.

“He doesn’t just tutor somebody for a year,” Principal Heidi Haggerty told WUSA9 in March. “When he takes on a student, he follows them for many years.”

Garland got emotional while speaking about his own daughters’ fifth grade graduation.

“Later today, when your family wants to take one more picture or give you an extra long hug, please let them. Don’t roll your eyes,” Garland said.

Garland also advised the students to look out for their friends as they navigated through middle school, “even if that means letting them know that they’re wrong.” Garland used the wise words of Professor Albus Dumbledore from the “Harry Potter” series to help make his point.

“As Professor Dumbledore told the Hogwarts class at the end of their school year, ‘it takes a great deal of bravery to stand up to your enemies, but as much to stand up to your friends.'”

In May, Garland gave the commencement address at his high school alma mater, Niles West High School, near Chicago, where he encouraged students to devote time to public service.

Watch a video of Garland’s speech above.

 

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Michelle Obama: My Proudest Achievement As First Lady Is My Daughters

Michelle Obama has accomplished a lot during nearly eight years as First Lady of the United States. But there’s one achievement that she prizes above all others: raising her two daughters. 

In conversation with Oprah Winfrey during the United State of Women summit in Washington on Tuesday, the First Lady was asked what she will be most proud of after leaving The White House. 

“You know, truly, I am most proud of my daughters,” Mrs. Obama responded. 

She acknowledged her long list of initiatives, from promoting better nutrition for children, to supporting military families, to helping insure that girls around the world have access to education. “This is all work that will continue. It is there. Those problems won’t be solved in my lifetime,” the First Lady said. 

But in regards to 15-year-old daughter Sasha and 17-year-old Malia Obama, the First Lady described her fears about raising her daughters with a “sense of normalcy” and confidence in the public eye. With both daughters now in their teens, Mrs. Obama said she feels a sense of relief, adding: 

And we just went to Malia’s high school graduation, and we’re watching Sasha move her way through high school. And I am very proud of those two and how they’ve managed this situation and how they have continued to be themselves, regular little girls just trying to figure it out.  And as all mothers do, you breathe that sigh of relief that you didn’t mess up your kids.  And every day I cross my fingers and hope that I’m doing right by them, and I’m providing them with a good foundation so that they can be great people.

Judging by how both daughters have grown up into awesome young ladies, Mrs. Obama has nothing to worry about — Malia will be attending Harvard next year, while Sasha is entering her sophomore year of high school. 

 

 

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How This Nonprofit Is Breaking The Cycle Of Homelessness, Addiction And Incarceration

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The Doe Fund is a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people who have been subjected to homelessness, addiction and incarceration rebuild their lives. It offers programs, such as job readiness training, that encourage self-sufficiency. In the video above, the organization’s vice president, Harriet McDonald, explains its mission to help people “below the first rung of the economic ladder,” and some participants explain what the Doe Fund has meant to them.  

This video was produced by Annie Thomas.

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Senate Votes To Include Women In The Draft

WASHINGTON — The Senate voted Tuesday to require women to register for the draft, an action with little practical impact anytime soon — the U.S. has relied on an all-volunteer military force for decades — but one that reflects a growing consensus that women are just as capable of serving and leading in the military as men.

The provision was tucked into the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act, which passed 85-13. It’s weird that the issue is being debated since the draft, also known as Selective Service, hasn’t been in use since 1973. What’s also surprising is that lawmakers who rarely agree with each other on anything are all for requiring women between the ages of 18 and 25 to sign up to serve their country.

“I support it,” Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who served in the Air Force for years, told HuffPost last month. “I don’t think you want to take half your population off the sidelines in case of a national emergency.”

An unabashed war hawk, Graham said the goal should be to rewrite the draft so it supplements the nation’s all-volunteer force.

“I think women have demonstrated their ability to serve the country, exceedingly with high standards and in incredibly good fashion,” he said. “Nobody is going to be put in a situation by the military that they are unequipped to handle, men or women.”

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) said “it’s just a matter of time” until women are treated equally in the military, and said she doesn’t know why the topic should be controversial.

“We all are going to be vigilant about making sure the standards never slip. There should not be one standard of what you have to be capable of to do certain jobs in the military, one for men and one for women,” she said. “But as long as we’re vigilant about that, women are just going to make us better.”

The Obama administration lifted the ban on women in serving combat units in late 2015. Since then, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has endorsed expanding the draft to women, and the Congressional Budget Office found that doing so would actually reduce federal spending.

Not everyone supports the change. When the provision was added to the NDAA during last month’s Senate Armed Services Committee, three Republicans voted against it: Sens. Ted Cruz (Texas), Mike Lee (Utah) and Deb Fischer (Neb.). Lee called it “misguided and ill-advised,” saying it warranted further debate. Cruz said he couldn’t bear the idea of people’s daughters being deployed.

“I cannot in good conscience vote to draft our daughters into the military, sending them off to war and forcing them into combat,” Cruz said in a statement. “Therefore, I did not support the NDAA in committee. I will continue my efforts to speak out against the effort to force America’s daughters into combat.”

The reason this debate is even happening is because of a bungled move by House Republican Rep. Duncan Hunter (Calif.), who was trying to prove that nobody would actually support expanding the draft to women if given the chance.

When the House Armed Services Committee debated its version of the NDAA bill in April, Hunter offered an amendment to include women in the draft as a dare to Democrats to vote for it. He didn’t support it, but he was trying to make the point that while such a change might sound like a progressive push for gender equality, it forces people to face the fact that women might have to “rip the enemy’s throats and kill them for our nation.”

“My daughters talk about serving, as well as my son,” Hunter said, “but I don’t want to see my daughters put in a place where they have to get drafted.”

He miscalculated. The amendment passed 32 to 30, with five Republicans joining Democrats to endorse it. House GOP leaders weren’t prepared for that, and in a last-ditch effort to prevent their members from going on record as potentially opposed to including women in the draft, they used procedural maneuvers set up during a late-night Rules Committee hearing to ensure the provision wasn’t in the NDAA when it finally hit the floor.

“They were doing some weird House mumbo jumbo, where they tried to take it out in the dark of night without votes,” as McCaskill put it.

Now that the Senate has approved expanding the draft, the House has to deal with it again. The two chambers have to reconcile their NDAA bills in a conference committee before a final bill goes to President Barack Obama for his signature (or veto).

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'Do I Need A Therapist Or A Friend?'

Reader Talk To Me writes,

I am very very unhappy with my marriage. Whenever we have a fight (we have a major one every 3 months or so) I spend days crying by myself and wishing I had a friend to talk to. I have friends but I can’t talk to them about this: it’s too embarrassing.

Is that what a therapist is for? I’ve been in therapy before and found it boring. But now I’m like yearning for someone to talk to.

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Dear TTM,

I am so sorry to hear how much you’re struggling in your marriage.  Although this isn’t what you’re asking about right now, it is not normative to have a blow up fight every few months that leaves you feeling this upset and lonely.  I encourage you to try couples counseling with your husband to work on this marriage.

Your question is interesting because it speaks to the wide range of issues and motivations that lead to people seeking therapy.  Some people do seem to want a therapist who acts mainly as a friend, and they do best with supportive presences that mainly listen to your stories and bear witness to your thoughts and feelings.  Some therapists, like me, are more active and engaged participants in therapy, and I don’t think that we come off quite as friend-like, although we can be extremely motivating and encouraging. The style of your prospective therapist is something to consider when picking the best therapist for you, and you may have to “audition” a bunch of therapists to find the best fit for you.

It sounds to me like right now you wish you had someone who would just listen, and I wonder why you don’t have any friends in whom you would be able to confide your marital issues.  I know it’s an awkward, private, and painful topic, but believe me, most people have experienced some sort of marital conflict and can commiserate, even if their fights haven’t been as bad as yours. And all the therapists in the world don’t add up to one true confidante.

I think that it would be useful to examine your assumptions about friendship and about privacy. Were you raised to keep feelings secret, and to believe that people won’t want to be close to you if you don’t appear to have a perfect life?  Were you taught to be ashamed of struggles, and to put on a happy face in public at all times?  This is a common way that parents teach their kids to get along in the world, and it comes from the parents’ own insecurity and their own desire to protect their children (and themselves, if their behavior is what they don’t want their kids to talk about) from potential rejection.

Parents who say, “Don’t tell anyone what goes on in this house” raise kids who cannot be vulnerable or open with others even in adulthood.  They cut themselves off from social support because they have been trained to keep their mouths shut out of fear of others’ judgement. Ironically, it is nearly impossible to have close and sustaining friendships if you are unable to be open with your friends about difficult issues in your life, so this secrecy stunts the very friendships that it is intended to protect.

In fact, I wonder if you also kept your most private issues and insecurities secret from the therapist that you saw, which would explain why you might have found therapy boring.  When clients engage in small talk during the majority of sessions, it is indeed boring, both for the client and the therapist!  (Therapists are people and can get bored too.)  It usually speaks to a childhood where a person was taught that getting too deep or sharing private matters is inappropriate and “wrong.”  All the small talk in the world cannot help you to feel as close to someone as just one truly genuine and intimate conversation.
I suggest that you do try therapy, but not to replace a friend.  I suggest that you resume therapy and focus on sharing the things that you may have previously kept hidden, and see if that doesn’t make therapy more interesting and feel more productive.  I also suggest that you do an inventory of your current friends and find a few that you’d like to try and get closer to.  With these friends, you can try confiding a bit about your marriage and seeing how it goes.

 Usually, people enjoy being confided in.  It makes them feel good about themselves, and like they have been especially chosen because of their kindness or intelligence.  Try it and see.

 Therapists and friends are certainly not mutually exclusive.  Everyone needs friends, and most everyone could benefit from therapy, or at least that’s what I think, being a therapist and all.
Good luck and keep me updated.  Till we meet again, I remain, The Blogapist Who Thinks Being “Real” Is Not Just Something They Talk About On The Bachelor.
 
This post was originally published here on Dr. Psych Mom.  Follow Dr. Rodman on Dr. Psych Mom, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Pinterest.  Order her book, How to Talk to Your Kids about Your Divorce: Healthy, Effective Communication Techniques for Your Changing Family.  Learn about Dr. Rodman’s private practice here, and email her to schedule an appointment here. This blog is not intended as diagnosis, assessment, or treatment, and should not replace consultation with your medical provider.

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4 Ways You Didn't Know Your Small Business Can Benefit From Online Auctions

If there’s one thing that most consumers who are online are busy with aside from work-related matters, it’s browsing and shopping at online auctions. And why not? The feeling and satisfaction you get when you find great deals and awesome bargains is just simply unbeatable. For this reason, it will be wise for small business owners to take advantage of this opportunity and to utilize online auction sites to the benefit of their small business.

1. Reduce your costs

Just because you have the funds for buying equipment, tools, and business supplies does it mean that you’ll automatically go to retail stores and get what you need from them. Before you make a purchase, why not search the web first to see if there’s anything available at online auctions? You’ll never know if there’s another business or company who have posted their equipment and/or supplies online for a lesser price. If there is, it’s always worth putting a bid because if you get it, it will mean lower costs for your small business. It’s one of the best ways to save!

2. Sell excess products

If you have excess products sitting around your store, office, or home unsold, you can sell them through online auction sites so you can still earn some money from them. The profit you’ll get may be a little lesser but that’s better than earning zero, right? On the other hand, if people bid for your products for a higher amount, then that would mean huge and extra income for your business. Either way, it would be a win for you.

3. Test price range for newly launched products

You may be working on a new product and you’re not sure yet about the price you’d sell it for. What you can do is to try selling it first in a number of online auctions. Let’s say that you’ve put it up for bidding in five sites. Check how much people bid for your product then compute for the average. The answer is the most reasonable price you can sell it to the rest of your customers.

4. Sell your products

So you have a website for your business and that’s mainly where your customers purchase the product that you sell. However, if you don’t get that high number of visitors to your site, it could mean lesser profit for you – something which online auction sites can help you with. Because most of them receive more visitors and hits, you can benefit from their audience reach when you sell your product through them. Imagine if you sell your product in more than 20 sites aside from your small business website (and your physical store, if you have one). There will be a huge leap in your profit, for sure. Just remember to sell only quality products and to make sure you appear reputable (link to your small business website, if possible) so buyers will trust you and what you sell.

Finding ways to save while getting a huge profit in your small business isn’t easy but not impossible. It’s something that online auction sites can help you with so go ahead and jump on the bandwagon. It’s a decision worth taking.

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There's More To This Car Seat Than Meets The Eye

It’s not all black and white. A photo of a gray car seat now has the internet seeing red, thanks to a clever optical illusion.

This car seat brainteaser is the latest image to send viewers into a tizzy trying to figure out the big deal.

Olivia Green recently posted the optical delusion on PlayBuzz, and it’s going viral.

Wondering what the fuss is? Take a look. A good long look. Then look again some more before you click on the photo to see what it is.

Too lazy to click? Turns out a gray iPad is resting on the seat.

See?

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